Archive for December, 2019

Six more countries join Trump-busting Iran barter group – The Guardian

Paris, London and Berlin on Saturday welcomed six new European countries to the Instex barter mechanism, which is designed to circumvent US sanctions against trade with Iran by avoiding use of the dollar.

As founding shareholders of the Instrument in Support of Trade Exchanges (Instex), France, Germany and the United Kingdom warmly welcome the decision taken by the governments of Belgium, Denmark, Finland, the Netherlands, Norway and Sweden, to join Instex as shareholders, the three said in a joint statement.

The Paris-based Instex functions as a clearing house that allows Iran to continue to sell oil and import other products or services in exchange.

The system has not yet enabled any transactions.

Washington in 2018 unilaterally withdrew from the international agreement governing Irans nuclear programme and reinstated heavy sanctions against Tehran.

The addition of the six new members further strengthens Instex and demonstrates European efforts to facilitate legitimate trade between Europe and Iran, the joint statement said.

It represents a clear expression of our continuing commitment to the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action the 2015 Iranian nuclear deal the trio added.

They insisted Iran must return to full compliance with its commitments under the deal without delay.

We remain fully committed to pursuing our efforts towards a diplomatic resolution within the framework of the JCPoA.

The 2015 deal set out the terms under which Iran would restrict its nuclear programme to civilian use in exchange for the lifting of Western sanctions.

Since the US pullout, Iran has taken four steps back from the accord.

The latest was on 4 November, when its engineers began feeding uranium hexafluoride gas into mothballed enrichment centrifuges at the underground Fordow plant south of Tehran.

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Six more countries join Trump-busting Iran barter group - The Guardian

Blocked roads then bullets: Iran’s brutal crackdown in its City of Roses – The Guardian

What are you scared of? the woman in the black coat shouts. Help me to understand. She marches up to a man in uniform guarding the petrol station. Youre ruining us, she screams, as the man walks away.

The exchange comes from footage taken around 1am on Friday 15 November in the south-central Iranian city of Shiraz. Hours earlier, in a surprise announcement, Irans government had said it was raising the price of fuel by up to three times, adding to the strain on a population already struggling with an economy suffocated by US sanctions.

The petrol-price hike would trigger what may have been the largest-scale unrest in the 40-year history of the Islamic Republic. Iranian officials this week estimated 200,000 people were involved in the protests and riots which led to 7,000 arrests and, by some estimates, the regimes deadliest-ever response to demonstrations. Amnesty International have confirmed 15 deaths in Shiraz; those on the ground say the toll is much higher.

Like the rest of Iran, Shiraz was cut off from the world by an unprecedented five-day internet blackout. Precisely what transpired in the heartland of Persian culture known as the City of Roses is still unclear.

But interviews with activists inside and outside Shiraz, as well as analysis of social media posts, give a glimpse of what is thought to have been one of the largest protest outbreaks in the country, incurring one of the highest known death tolls.

Before the woman in the black coat leaves the petrol station, she turns to the other drivers in line, exhorting them to park their cars in the middle of the roads to protest the price increase. On Saturday, whoever is a real man will park their car in the middle of the street, she declares from the door.

By Saturday morning, people were heeding the woman and others calling for mass civil disobedience. At least one major road in Shiraz had become a parking lot. People are protesting and have blocked the streets completely, says a voice, surveying the sea of cars in both directions in an industrial area of the city. Drivers gather in groups outside their cars, chatting. The vehicles curve along the palm-lined road to the edge of the frame.

As the day went on, protesters were pouring into the streets of outer-lying areas across the city, according to activists. Social media footage shows significant unrest in at least six spots. The two most prominent incidents were in the suburb of Sadra and on Maliabad Boulevard, a long thoroughfare of banks and retailers that cuts across northern Shiraz.

The rallies were peaceful, and at first, so was the state response. Footage shows demonstrators applauding as police in riot gear are handed flowers. Protesters say they sat in groups on the road, chanting and playing cards.

Later, a protester would record a voice message to the US-based Iranian activist Masih Alinejad, reflecting on the morning. Everything was going well and people were all smiling and happy, he said. I saw people giving roses to the police, the first days was very peaceful and it was all good. Even the police were fine.

It did not last. Footage that activists believe was shot on Maliabad Boulevard the same day appears to show security personnel charging through crowds, sending people fleeing. Clouds of what appears to be tear gas can be seen forming.

There also appears to have been rioting: a video said to have been shot in the city shows fires burning in several spots, a handful of shops gutted, and the road scattered with paper and debris.

The youth has no future in this country with these thieves in power, a protester tells Alinejad in a voice recording heard by the Guardian. They couldnt take it anymore and they were full of rage. They took things to another level.

Things started to escalate when the police started to beat people up. We had to make our weapons to defend ourselves and that was it. It was all because we had to defend our lives.

The protesters, including many from working-class neighbourhoods, brawled with security personnel in some areas, using nails pushed through bottle caps as makeshift spikes to puncture the tyres of police motorcycles and cars.

At some point that afternoon, the police started shooting. Activists have posted footage from Saturday that shows gunshots going off near a Maliabad Boulevard police station.

This is Shiraz and the armed forces are firing at the people, says a man filming outside the police station in another clip. He pushes his way through a chanting crowd, who surround a bloodied man on the ground. It is Mehdi Nekouyee, 20, the first person confirmed to have been killed in Shirazs protests.

Because the internet was cut, Nekouyees family overseas first learned of his death when someone inside Iran wished them condolences on social media. [Mehdi] was quiet, very open minded, his uncle remembers. He wanted freedom, freedom of speech.

Nekouyees killing enraged the demonstrators. Activists say the protesters began to hurl rocks at the police station, tearing at its fence. By Saturday evening, the building was said to be alight.

They were firing live rounds and tear gas, but people were really courageous and did whatever it took, a mans voice said in another recorded message sent to Alinejad. We asked the people who were burning things [to stop], we dont know who they are, but people are full of rage and no one could stop them.

It is really bad and everyone is running for their lives, and the armed forces have no mercy and I couldnt believe they were people from the same homeland It was a violence that Ive never seen before.

Throughout Saturday and the next day, demonstrations were erupting in different parts of the city. Golshan, a suburb in Shirazs north-west that is home to many members of the Qashqai minority group, became a war zone, one activist with contacts in the city said. Security forces entered with heavy weapons and helicopters. All roads into the area were closed from Saturday until the following Tuesday, he said.

Protesters appear to have remained in control of Sadra for most of the weekend. On Sunday 17 November, demonstrators appear to have set fire to the office of the senior imam in the area, a direct attack on the countrys clerical establishment.

Activists say the response to the arson was swift and included helicopters swooping over the crowds, firing bullets and tear gas, a tactic reported in several areas and filmed in Sadra.

Ruhallah Gashgaei, an activist with links inside Shiraz, said an accurate death toll was still impossible to ascertain, but the average of several independent eyewitness accounts was that 60 were killed across Shiraz and an additional nine died in the suburb of Sadra. More information would emerge as different parts of the city were brought online, he said.

By Monday 18 November, the regime appeared to have retaken control of most of Shiraz. Images taken last Sunday and sent to the Guardian showed the city still scarred by the conflict, littered with debris and burned out cars.

An activist in Shiraz estimated 80 bank branches and seven petrol stations had been set alight across the city. Police and Revolutionary Guards are carrying out raids of homes and hospital wards, arresting suspected protesters. The countrys supreme leader, Ali Khamenei, has blamed the unrest on a deep, vast and very dangerous conspiracy concocted by Irans enemies overseas.

Last night Shiraz was under the control of Shirazs people, said a protester in a voice message to Alinejad. What [the authorities] say about controlling the situation is all nonsense. The weather changed and became very cold even God is with these people [the regime].

Yes, we survived, a woman says in one of the recorded messages. I saw two people getting shot next to me. Since Monday there has been a military curfew, there are [paramilitary] Basij officers all over the place. They were really scared and with every slight sound they were reacting strangely.

Activists estimate the death toll in Shiraz to number in the dozens, but have not yet been able to provide proof. An Amnesty International report this week increased its confirmed death count across the country to 143. The Iranian government rejects this figure but has not provided its own.

Everyone took to the streets, I was really hopeful that things would change, one of the recordings to Alinejad said. For two days Shiraz was under the control of the people, but nothing bad happened. There was complete peace. It was such a great thing that people had the control over the city. I could see how the country would look like if we take power.

Translations by Mohammed Rasool

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Blocked roads then bullets: Iran's brutal crackdown in its City of Roses - The Guardian

The Joint Responsibility Of Khamenei And Rouhani For Deaths Of Iran Protesters – Iran News By Radio Farda

Beyond the shadow of a doubt, the Islamic Republic Supreme Leader Ayatollah Khamenei bears the highest responsibility, followed by President Hassan Rouhani, for the order to use deadly force against people who poured into the streets to protest an unexpected overnight three-fold increase in gasoline prices on November 15.

Based on the Islamic Republic Constitution, Iran's Supreme National Security Council (SNSC), presided over by the President, oversees countering anti-establishment protests and dealing with national political crises. The SNSC, assisted by the country's National Security Council (NSC), has access to all tools needed for suppressing widespread demonstrations.

The Constitution stipulates that, at the time of national unrest, SNSC decides the methods and tools required for controlling anti-regime rallies.

Furthermore, SNSC is able to deploy all military forces, including the members of the police, the regular army, the Islamic Revolution Guards Corps, as well as the militia and armed plainclothesmen to end all protests with an iron fist. The "supreme council" also has the authority to decide on the type of weapons, including aircraft, tanks, and RPGs, that might be used against the protesters.

The country's National Security Council (NSC), headed by the Minister of Interior, Abdol Reza Rahmani Fazli, is practically a subdivision of the SNSC, implementing its guidelines.

Meanwhile, the head of the SNSC, the country's President, may delegate to the head of NSC to preside over the supreme council (SNSC) on his behalf.

That's what happened almost immediately after the widespread anti-regime demonstrations that broke out on November 15. The Interior Minister, assigned by the President, took control of the SNSC to take steps for controlling the fast-expanding protest movement.

As the caretaker of the SNSC, Rahmani Fazli decided on November 16 to shut down the internet across Iran to prevent protesters from linking-up with each other as well as being able to freely upload footage of the unrest and circulate it on social media all over the world.

Although it is still unclear if the SNSC, under Rahmani Fazli's temporary leadership, endorsed opening fire at protesters, Rouhani's responsibility in the recent massacres remains a fact.

Above Rouhani, the Islamic Republic Supreme Leader Ayatollah Khamenei is also responsible for the brutal suppression and killing of protesters since he has the last word on major national affairs, without being accountable to anyone.

Article 176 of the Islamic Republic Constitution stipulates that the Supreme Leader is the leading authority in Iran, and none of the SNCS' rulings and decisions are implementable without his blessing and confirmation.

Therefore, Ayatollah Khamenei is directly responsible for the shutdown of the internet across the country and killing dozens of people who merely protested the shocking hike in gasoline prices.

Furthermore, Khamenei is responsible also because he is commander-in-Chief of Irans armed forces.

Based on Article 110 of the Islamic Republic Constitution, the armed forces that fired at demonstrators and killed dozens were merely obeying orders issued by the Supreme Leader.

Following Khamenei and Rouhani, nearly thirteen other civil and military officials are also responsible for the recent bloodshed and detention of thousands.

These include all members of the SNSC; its Secretary the IRGC Rear Admiral Ali Shamkhani, the representative of the Supreme Leader to the influential body Saeid Jalili, the members of the NSC, the speaker of Majles (parliament) Ali Larijani, the head of the Judiciary Ebrahim Raeesi, the head of Plan and Budget Organization Mohammad Baqer Nobakht, the Interior Minister Abdol Reza Rahmani Fazli, the Foreign Minister Mohammad Javad Zarif, the Minister of Intelligence Mahmoud Alavi, the Commander of the General Staff of Armed Forces of the Islamic Republic, IRGC Major General Mohammad Hossein Baqeri (Bagheri), and the Chief Commander of the IRGC Major General Hossein Salami.

According to Article 176 of the country's Constitution, the Chief Commanders of the regular Army and the IRGC are not fixed members of the SNSC but attend its sessions on affairs related to their duties.

Meanwhile, the role of several SNSC members in suppressing protesters and anti-regime demonstrators is more crucial than their counterparts. For example, the Minister of Interior Rahmani Fazli played a decisive and direct role in shutting down the internet, placing more pressure on the protesters.

Moreover, the governors across Iran are also directly under the Interior Minister's command, implementing his orders.

It also goes without saying that parallel intelligence apparatuses, notably the IRGC's, have always played a decisive role in killing and detaining thousands of people who dare to challenge the clergy-dominated ruling establishment.

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The Joint Responsibility Of Khamenei And Rouhani For Deaths Of Iran Protesters - Iran News By Radio Farda

Former Acting U.S. Solicitor General: Want to Know What an Impeachable Offense Is? Look to the Pence Rule – Law & Crime

If President Donald Trump were to actually be impeached and removed from office, as unlikely as the latter is, Vice President Mike Pence would be the one to replace him. Pence is something of an authority on what a High Crime and Misdemeanor is, according to former acting U.S. Solicitor General Neal Katyal.

If you want to know what an impeachable offense is, look to the so-called Pence Rule that was uttered in 2008 when Pence was a member of the House of Representatives, Katyal said on Wednesday.

Katyal, speaking about his new book Impeach: the Case Against Donald Trump on CNNs New Day, began by clarifying what the Founders meant by a High Crime and Misdemeanor. He used Pences past words to do so.

By High Crime, the Founders meant an abuse of the public trust, Katyal said.Whether you look at 1787 or you could even look at the way Mike Pence when he was in the House of Representatives in 2008 put it in what I call in the book the Pence Rule when a president is putting his interests above those of the American people, thats what a High Crime and Misdemeanor is.

Mike Pence literally said that out loud, CNNs John Berman said.

He did, in 2008. The book begins with that, Katyal continued. Americans, I know we have Republicans, and Democrats, and Independents. Just think about this by flipping the identity of the political party. Imagine it wasnt President Trump [] imagine it was President Obama who was conspiring with a foreign government to get help on his rival Mitt Romney or whoever. How would you feel about that?

It turns out that theres an even longer history when it comes to Pence and impeachment-related remarks.

Pence once penned a column, Why Clinton Must Resign or Be Impeached, in which he said, again, that abuse of the public trust by violating the oath of office is an impeachable offense. He said that, to the average American, impeachment might seem like an extreme path to take, but its in the Constitution for a reason.

When a president fails to fulfill his oath of office, as is the case where the law is broken in a big way or a small way (another way of saying high crimes or misdemeanors), the Constitution provides for a mechanism whereby the legislative branch might impeach him, Pence said. This may seem drastic to the average American. It is. Our founders intended it to be so because they intended the President of the United States to be the center of the government of the United States.

Pence then said that Bill Clintonmustresign or be impeached because he repeatedly lied to the American people:

Despite his absurd assertions to the contrary, President Clintons admission to a sexual relationship with Monica Lewinsky stands in diametric opposition to his sworn testimony in the Jones vs. Clinton case. The Presidents responsibility to faithfully execute the laws of the land begins in his own administration. The President committed perjury. Perjury is a crime. Presidents who commit crimes should resign or be impeached.

Further, the Presidents repeated lies to the American people in this matter compound the case against him as they demonstrate his failure to protect the institution of the presidency as the inspiring supreme symbol of all that is highest in our American ideals. Leaders affect the lives of families far beyond their own private life. In the Bible story of Esther we are told of a king who was charged to put right his own household because there would be no end of disrespect and discord among the families of the kingdom if he failed to do so. In a day when reckless extramarital sexual activity is manifesting itself in our staggering rates of illegitimacy and divorce, now more than ever, America needs to be able to look to her First Family as role models of all that we have been and can be again.

[Image via Mark Wilson/Getty Images]

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Former Acting U.S. Solicitor General: Want to Know What an Impeachable Offense Is? Look to the Pence Rule - Law & Crime

5 international stories of the week – Ball State Daily News

Editors Note: This listicle is part of a weekly series by The Ball State Daily News summarizing five stories from around the world. All summaries are based on stories published by The Associated Press.

The U.S. Vice Presidents visit to Iraq, the World Wide Web inventors Contract for the Web, mass detention camps in China, the pro-democracy vote in Hong Kong and the extinction of Sumatran rhinos in Malaysia make up this weeks five international stories.

Vice President Mike Pence and his wife Karen Pence, second from left, serve turkey to troops at Al Asad Air Base, Iraq, Saturday, Nov. 23, 2019. The visit is Pences first to Iraq and comes nearly one year since President Donald Trumps surprise visit to the country. (AP Photo/Andrew Harnik)

Pence works to reassure Kurdish allies in surprise Iraq trip

Vice President Mike Pence worked to reassure the United States Kurdish allies in an unannounced trip to Iraq Saturday, two months after President Donald Trump ordered a pullback of U.S. forces in Syria. The visit was meant to hearten United States regional partners in the fight against the Islamic State group after the U.S. pulled troops from northern Syria, leaving Americas Kurdish allies there to face a bloody cross-border Turkish assault last month.

Read more: Syria

This Oct. 24, 2018, file photo shows creator of the World Wide Web Sir Tim Berners-Lee speaking during a data privacy conference at the European Parliament in Brussels. Berners-Lee is releasing an ambitious rule book for online governance, a bill of rights and obligations for the internet. (AP Photo/Virginia Mayo, File)

Web inventor has ambitious plan to take back net

World Wide Web inventor Tim Berners-Lee released an ambitious rule book for online governance a bill of rights and obligations for the internet designed to counteract the growing prevalence of misinformation, mass surveillance and censorship. The Contract for the Web seeks commitments from governments and industry to make and keep knowledge freely available a digital policy agenda true to the design vision of the 30-year-old web.

Read more: Data privacy

In this Nov. 4, 2017 file photo, Uighur security personnel patrol near the Id Kah Mosque in Kashgar in western China's Xinjiang region. Classified documents, leaked to a consortium of news organizations, lay out the Chinese government's deliberate strategy to lock up ethnic minorities to rewire their thoughts and even the language they speak. (AP Photo/File)

Secret documents reveal how China mass detention camps work

Voluntary job training is the reason the Chinese government has given for detaining more than a million ethnic minorities, most of them Muslims. But leaked classified documents lay out the Chinese governments deliberate strategy to lock up ethnic minorities, even before they commit a crime, to rewire their thoughts and the language they speak. The papers also show how Beijing is pioneering a new form of social control using data and artificial intelligence.

Read more: China Cables

Election winner candidate Kelvin Lam, right, and pro-democracy activist Joshua Wong, second right, wave to people and thank for their support, outside South Horizons Station in Hong Kong, Monday, Nov. 25, 2019. Pro-democracy candidates won nearly half of the seats in Hong Kong's local elections, according to partial returns Monday. (AP Photo/Vincent Yu)

Pro-democracy camp wins landslide in Hong Kong vote

Hong Kongs pro-democracy opposition won a stunning landslide victory in weekend local elections in a clear rebuke to city leader Carrie Lam over her handling of violent protests that have divided the semi-autonomous Chinese territory. The result could force Chinas central government to rethink how to handle the unrest, which is now in its sixth month. District councils have little power, but the vote became a referendum on public support for the protests.

Read more: Hong Kong

In this Aug. 18, 2019, photo, Sabah Deputy Chief Minister Christina Liew, right, looks at rhino Iman in cage in eastern Sabah state . The Sumatran rhinoceros has become extinct in Malaysia, after the last of the species in the country succumbed to cancer. (Sabah Deputy Chief Ministers Office via AP)

Sumatran rhino extinct in Malaysia as lone survivor dies

The Sumatran rhino has become extinct in Malaysia after the last of the species in the country succumbed to cancer. The WWF conservation group estimates there are about 80 Sumatran rhinos left, mostly living in the wild in Indonesia. The International Union for the Conservation of Nature states about 24,500 rhinos survive in the wild with another 1,250 in captivity worldwide. Rhinos are killed for their horns, which are used in traditional medicines in parts of Asia.

Read more: Wildlife

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5 international stories of the week - Ball State Daily News